Russia Before and After Crimea

Nationalism and Identity, 2010–2017

Pål Kolstø editor Helge Blakkisrud editor

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Edinburgh University Press

Published:16th Jan '18

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Russia Before and After Crimea cover

Russia’s annexation of Crimea in 2014 marked a watershed in post-Cold War European history and brought East–West relations to a low. At the same time, by selling this fateful action in starkly nationalist language, the Putin regime achieved record-high popularity. This book shows how, after the large-scale 2011–2013 anti-Putin demonstrations in major Russian cities and the parallel rise in xenophobia related to the Kremlin’s perceived inability to deal with the influx of Central Asian labour migrants, the annexation of Crimea generated strong ‘rallying around the nation’ and ‘rallying around the leader’ effects. The contributors to this collection go beyond the news headlines to focus on overlooked aspects of Russian society such as intellectual racism and growing xenophobia. These developments are contextualised with an overview of Russian nationalism: state-led, grassroots and the tensions between the two.

ISBN: 9781474433853

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 654g

352 pages